List of national legal systems (Ajax): Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
Line 13: Line 13:
|bgcolor=brown|Bijuridical
|bgcolor=brown|Bijuridical
| There are parallel religious courts in addition to the civil law courts.
| There are parallel religious courts in addition to the civil law courts.
|-
|width=100px|{{flag|Deseret}}
|bgcolor=#3F9BBB|Civil law
| Deseret's judiciary is primarily based on a system of civil law. Because of the highly secular nature of the courts, religious law of the [[Mormon Church (Ajax)|Mormon Church]] is usually interwoven into secular law such that the distinction between the two, in the courts, is blurred.
|-
|-
|width=100px|{{flag|Ghant}}
|width=100px|{{flag|Ghant}}

Revision as of 23:16, 27 November 2019

List of national legal systems in Ajax

  Civil law
  Common law
  Religious Law
  Bijuridical/mixed (civil and common law)

Nation Legal system Details
 Benaajab Bijuridical There are parallel religious courts in addition to the civil law courts.
 Ghant Common law Ghant has a common law system in which laws are derived from precedent; judges interpret and enforce it. Historically, the Common Law was based on the Old Laws.
 Latium Civil law While the Latin government operates under a largely uncodified constitution, Latium's legal system is a heavily codified civil law system with the Codes of Law serving as the compilation and codification of the general and permanent statutes. Due to the civil law system, magistrates and judges general do not rule on constitutionality of Imperial Edicts, executive orders, or Senate legislation (unless legislation is determined to be "deemed beyond the Senate's functions or ability to pass"), and a lack of jury trial for nearly all non-criminal cases.
 Ottonia Civil Law The Federation operates on a system of primarily civil law, wherein most laws are codified. Unusually, the federal government operates on a constitution that is largely unwritten, and as such, in cases regarding the powers and functions of government, judicial precedent is still important, and judges have latitude to apply precedents and personal judgment in making rulings in cases where the law is unclear or absent.
 Sydalon Civil law Sydalon's legal system is primarily based on Latin law and in some instances canon law.
 Yisrael Bijuridical There are parallel religious courts in addition to civil law courts, with the religious courts divided by Jewish law and recognized non-Jewish religious law.